Tangential fan scroll and discharged diffuser design

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6185954
  • Patent Number
    6,185,954
  • Date Filed
    Thursday, March 11, 1999
    25 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, February 13, 2001
    23 years ago
Abstract
An air conditioning unit comprising: a housing having a first half and a second half; the first half of the housing containing an indoor heat exchange coil and a blower moving air through said coil from at least a housing inlet to a housing outlet. The blower discharges into a diffuser duct having a diffuser section with a first segment and a second segment where the first and second segments have first and second respective and differing angles of diffusion.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




The present invention is directed to an air conditioning system such as a self contained unit ventilator or similar system having a blower or fan discharging air into a discharge duct. More particularly, the present invention is directed to the optimum scroll housing about the fan or blower and to the optimum discharge diffuser design. Alternatively, the invention is also applicable to terminal devices such as fan coil units.




A self contained unit ventilator is a typical packaged air conditioner in that it contains a complete air conditioning system including a serially linked indoor heat exchanger, compressor, outdoor heat exchanger, and an expansion device leading back to the indoor heat exchanger. The outdoor heat exchanger is in fluid communication with outdoor ambient air and, unless the unit ventilator is configured as a heat pump, acts as a condenser. The indoor heat exchanger is in fluid communication with the space to be conditioned and typically acts as an evaporator. The self contained unit ventilator is typically used in classroom or hotel applications and the incremental reduction of size of the unit ventilator provides significant competitive advantages.




Typically the indoor and outdoor sections are separated from each other by a physical barrier and each section includes a blower or fan moving air through the respective indoor or outdoor heat exchanger. For purposes of the present invention, the term blower and the term fan are used interchangeably and are intended to apply to all air moving devices. The blower or fan is often a cross flow tangential blower having a scroll housing about it where the fan's discharge leads into a discharge/diffuser duct. The scroll housing radially expands about the blower and guides the blower's discharge into the diffuser duct. A cutoff separates the blower input from the blower discharge.




It is desirable to minimize the fan's energy consumption while maximizing the diffusion of the fan's output. It is even more important to minimize the generation and radiation of acoustical sounds by the overall unit ventilator and particularly by the blower.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




It is an object, feature and advantage of the present invention to solve the problems of the prior art terminal devices.




It is an object, feature and advantage of the present invention to provide a scroll housing and diffuser duct arrangement for a tangential blower which minimizes energy losses, which minimizes the generation and radiation of acoustic sound, and which maximizes the flow diffusion of the blower's discharge.




It is an object, feature and advantage of the present invention to eliminate the line-of-sight transmission of acoustical sound between an air conditioning blower and a space which is being conditioned.




It is an object, feature and advantage of the present invention to optimize the scroll housing and cutoff to maximize the pressure and flow provided by a tangential fan without increasing the size of the fan.




It is an object, feature and advantage of the present invention to provide a short discharge duct to convert the kinetic energy of the fan discharge velocity into some potential energy through the use of a diffusing section of duct.




It is an object, feature and advantage of the present invention to provide an optimum flow path through a diffusing section of duct so as to minimize energy losses while minimizing flow separation.




The invention applies to all blowers or fans having a scroll housing or a discharge diffuser duct. Such blowers or fans are typically referred to as tangential, centrifugal, squirrel cage, or crossflow blowers or fans. A compact centrifugal fan is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,570,996 to Smiley, a centrifugal fan is also shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,279,515 to Moore et al., and a tangential fan is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,293,758 to Ames et al., all of which are commonly assigned with the present invention and hereby incorporated by reference.




The present invention provides an air conditioning unit. The unit comprises a housing having a first half and a second half where the first half of the housing contains an indoor heat exchange coil and a blower moving air through said coil from at least a housing inlet to a housing outlet. The blower discharges into a diffuser duct having a diffuser section with a first segment and a second segment where the first and second segments have first and second respective and differing angles of diffusion.




The invention further provides the second half of the housing containing a compressor and outdoor heat exchange coil; wherein the indoor heat exchange coil, the compressor and the outdoor heat exchange coil are serially linked into an air conditioning circuit.




The present invention further provides a cross flow blower housing. The housing comprises a scroll housing section having an expanding scroll section from a starting line to a finishing line; and a linear housing section contiguous with the finishing line of the scroll housing section and extending linearly therefrom. The housing also includes a cutoff section having a first segment angle at a first angle relative to the linear housing section and having a second segment angle at a second angle relative to the linear housing section.




The present invention also provides a blower having a diameter D and an axis. The blower comprises a scroll housing about the fan having a starting line located a radial distance R


i


from the fan axis, and including a scroll expansion section starting at the beginning line and radially expanding in arc to a finishing line R


f


relative to the fan axis. The blower includes a linear diffusion segment starting at the finish line and continuing linearly therefrom at a first distance. The blower also includes a fan diffuser arranged to separate a blower intake of the blower from a blower discharge of the blower. The fan diffuser has a cutoff end proximal the blower, a first segment continuing from the cutoff in a direction away from the blower and expanding from the linear portion at a first angle for a first distance, and a second expansion segment located after the first expansion segment and continuous therewith. The second expansion segment expands from the linear portion at a second angle for a second distance.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING





FIG. 1

shows a block drawing of an air conditioning system such as a unit ventilator in accordance with the present invention with the major internal components also displayed.





FIG. 2

is a cutaway of

FIG. 1

taken along lines


2





2


.





FIG. 3

is a perspective of the tangential blower, the scroll housing, the cutoff and the diffuser section of the present invention as shown in FIG.


2


.





FIG. 4

is a cutaway of

FIG. 3

taken along lines


4





4


.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

shows a self contained air conditioning system


10


such as a unit ventilator. Although shown in the preferred embodiment as a full air conditioning system, the invention relates to the indoor section and thus is applicable to all terminal devices including, for example, fan coil units and the like. The system


10


includes a housing


12


surrounding an indoor section


14


and an outdoor section


16


. A barrier


18


separates the indoor section


14


from the outdoor section


16


.




The housing


12


preferably contains an air conditioning system


20


including a compressor


22


whose discharge is directed to an outdoor heat exchanger


24


typically acting as a condenser. The compressor


22


and the outdoor heat exchanger


24


are in the outside section


16


and include an airflow path


26


entering from outside ambient air


28


through an outside air inlet aperture


30


passing through the outdoor heat exchanger


24


and returning to the outdoor ambient air


28


through an outside air outlet aperture


32


. A blower


27


motivates air through this airflow path


26


and out the outlet aperture


32


.




The air conditioning system


20


also includes an expansion device


34


connected to the discharge of the outside heat exchanger and controlling the flow of refrigerant to an indoor heat exchanger


36


. The discharge of the indoor heat exchanger


36


returns to the compressor


22


. The indoor heat exchanger


36


is located in the indoor section


14


, and the expansion device


34


can be located in either the indoor or outdoor section


14


,


16


.




Referring to both

FIGS. 1 and 2

, the indoor section


14


includes a blower


40


having an axis


42


aligned to draw air over the indoor heat exchanger


36


. The indoor section


14


includes a return air inlet


44


bringing air from the space


46


to be cooled, an outside air inlet


48


bringing in outside air from ambient air


28


, and a supply air discharge duct


54


discharging conditioned supply air back through a discharge aperture


50


into the space


46


to be cooled.




Referring now to both

FIGS. 1

,


2


and


3


, an airflow path


52


is provided from the return air inlet


44


and from the outdoor air inlet


48


to pass thru the indoor heat exchangers


36


, into the blower


40


, through the discharge duct


54


and out the discharge aperture


50


. A scroll housing


56


is provided about the blower


40


to direct and control the blower's operation, and a cutoff


58


and a diffuser section


60


are provided to diffuse and direct the fan's discharge through the discharge duct


54


and the discharge aperture


50


. Typically, the diffuser section


60


is a planar section which angles away from a planar section


61


of the duct


54


, where the planar section


61


lies between the scroll housing


56


and the discharge aperture


50


.




The diffuser and scroll geometries of the present invention are discussed in more detail with regard to

FIGS. 3 and 4

. The blower


40


of the present invention incorporates a significant flow direction change while incurring a minimum energy loss as the air is moved to and through the discharge aperture


50


. The invention's geometry maximizes flow diffusion in the diffuser duct


54


while minimizing the generation and radiation of acoustical sound. There is no line-of-sight transmission between the blower


40


and the discharge


50


.




The discharge air leaving the blower


40


exhibits a wavelike pattern


62


in the discharge duct


54


. This pattern


62


normally dampens out after approximately 3-4 fan diameters D downstream of the blower discharge


64


. The pattern


62


has a surrounding flow field


66


which is fairly unstable in the immediate vicinity of the fan wheel discharge


64


. If the discharge duct


54


is fairly short such that the length


68


is less than one diameter D, the blower


40


exhibits pulsating pressure and unsteady sound signals. Because of this, it is desirable to apply at least a short discharge duct


54


on the order of 1.5 to 2 blower diameters D, yielding a minimum recommended discharge duct


54


of length equal to 1.5 D.




Also, since the velocity of the fan discharge


64


is necessarily high, as is characteristic of this type of blower


40


, it is desirable to convert some of this kinetic energy to potential energy. The most effective method to achieve this conversion is by providing a diffusing section


60


in the duct


54


. However, the rate of diffusion provided by the diffuser


60


as the section


60


angles from the planar section


61


is critical. Too rapid expansion of the cross section


70


of the duct


54


promotes flow separation relative to the pattern


62


and increased energy losses. Contrarily, a too slowly expanding cross section


70


of the duct


54


requires more space to achieve the desired velocity changes and can in fact have a negative effect on the diffusion by the increased frictional losses due to the longer flow path. Additionally, any directing or turning of the flow from the normal path incurs energy losses, these losses being a function of geometry, air velocity and turning angle. It is not unusual to incur losses on the order of one or more velocity heads in turning the air 90°.




The present invention proposes more effective diffusion, stabilization and turning of the air in the pattern


62


. Specifically, the diffuser


60


includes at least two segments


72


,


74


where each segment


72


,


74


has a distinct diffuser angle


76


,


78


respectively is more practical and approaches the optimum rate of diffuser angle change. For the tangential blower


40


with its wave like discharge airflow pattern


62


, the first segment


72


of the diffuser


60


should match the discharge airflow pattern


62


and angle, allowing quasi-neutral direction and some diffusion while the flow


66


is allowed to stabilize. Preferably the angle


76


is approximately 17° for the first segment


72


where the segment


72


has a distance


80


approximately equal to the fan diameter D. This first segment


72


commences at the fan cutoff


58


and continues the direction and slope of the fan cutoff


58


to result in very good flow control, stabilization and diffusion.




The second segment


74


has a diffusion angle


78


which is somewhat less than the diffusion angle


76


. The diffusion angle


78


of the second segment


74


is approximately 2°. The length


82


of the second segment


74


is approximately 2.4 diameters D of the blower


40


.




This multi-segmented arrangement results in a discharge flow pattern


62


with an initial wave length


84


of about 2.5 diameters D of the blower


40


. The next quarter wave length


86


coincides with the turn and exit from the duct


54


through the discharge


50


. Consequently, the natural discharge flow angle matches the angle


90


of discharge louvers


92


relative to the vertically aligned duct end


94


to minimize any flow angle change energy loss. Preferably the angle


90


is approximately 10 to 15° from the vertical. The length


68


of the straight section


61


of the discharge duct


54


can be adjusted somewhat to achieve a differing discharge neutral flow angle and the louvers


92


can be adjusted for other angles but incur some additional energy losses if differing from the natural flow direction. This geometric combination of diffuser angle, duct length and discharge area is optimized for the space and discharge velocity and angle. Other requirements could be met by varying the geometric parameters.




The scroll housing


56


is also optimized to provide higher pressure and flow versus current designs while using the same space as the current design. The scroll housing


56


commences at a starting line


100


which is an initial radius R


i


from the blower axis


42


. The scroll housing


56


radially expands from the starting line


100


to an ending line


102


which is a radial distance R


f


from the blower axis


42


. The starting line


100


commences the radial expansion of the scroll housing


56


, and the ending line


102


indicates the termination of that radial expansion relative to the axis


42


. At any particular point


104


on the expansion of the scroll housing


56


, the radial distance from the axis


42


is defined by an expansion radius R. Expansion angle


106


defines the angle between the initial radius R


i


and the expansion radius R, while terminal angle


108


defines the angle between the initial radius R


i


and the final radius R


f


. Tangent line


110


is a line tangent to the representative point


104


and having a tangent angle


112


.




Given the foregoing, the shape of the scroll housing


56


is defined by the equation








R=R




i




e




Ln(1+2






π






Tan(angle 112))angle 106/360°


.






Preferably the angular distance between R


f


and R


i


is 122° as shown by angle


108


. Additionally, the ratio of the initial radius R


i


to the blower diameter D is preferably 0.563, and the final radius R


f


in relation to the blower diameter D is a ratio of 1.103.




The present invention shows a scroll housing and diffuser duct which minimizes the generation and radiation of acoustical noise from the blower while promoting the flow and pressure generated by the fan. It will be apparent to a person of ordinary skill in the art that many variations in this are apparent. All such variations and modifications are contemplated to fall within the spirit and scope of the claimed invention.




What is desired to be secured for Letters Patent of the United States is set forth in the following claims.



Claims
  • 1. A cross flow blower housing comprising:a scroll housing section having an expanding scroll section from a starting line to a finishing line; a linear housing section contiguous with the finishing line of the scroll housing section and extending linearly therefrom; and a cutoff section having a first segment angle at a first angle relative to the linear housing section and having a second segment angle at a second angle relative to the linear housing section.
  • 2. The cross flow blower of claim 1 wherein the blower includes a scroll housing arranged about it and terminating at the diffuser duct, the scroll housing being defined by the following formula:R=RieLn(1+2π(tan(angle x))angle Y/360 where R denotes the radial distance of any point on the scroll housing from the blower axis and where Ri denotes the initial radius of the scroll housing from the blower housing, and where angle X is the tangent angle of the respective point relative to the blower housing and where angle Y is the angle from the initial radius Ri.
  • 3. The cross flow blower of claim 1 wherein the linear housing section has a length which is 1.5 times the diameter of a blower arranged within the scroll housing section.
  • 4. The cross flow blower of claim 1 wherein the angle of the second segment is less than the angle of the first segment.
  • 5. The cross flow blower of claim 1 further including a discharge duct arranged at an end of the linear housing section away from the scroll housing and including louvers angled at 10 to 15° from the vertical.
  • 6. A blower having a diameter D and an axis comprising:a scroll housing about the fan having a starting line located a radial distance Ri from the fan axis, and including a scroll expansion section starting at the beginning line and radially expanding in arc to a finishing line Rf relative to the fan axis, and further including a linear diffusion segment starting at the finish line and continuing linearly therefrom at a first distance; and a fan diffuser arranged to separate a blower intake of the blower from a blower discharge of the blower, the fan diffuser having a cutoff end proximal the blower, and a first segment continuing from the cutoff in a direction away from the blower and expanding from the linear portion at a first angle for a first distance, and a second expansion segment located after the first expansion segment and continuous therewith, the second expansion segment expanding from the linear portion at a second angle for a second distance.
  • 7. The blower of claim 6 wherein the first angle is greater than the second angle.
  • 8. The blower of claim 7 wherein the first distance is less than the second distance.
  • 9. The blower of claim 8 wherein the linear distance is a minimum distance of 1.5 times the blower diameter.
  • 10. The blower of claim 9 wherein the first distance is approximately a blower diameter.
  • 11. The blower of claim 10 wherein the second distance is approximately 2.4 times the blower diameter.
  • 12. The blower of claim 11 wherein the first angle is approximately 17° and the second angle is approximately 2°.
  • 13. The blower of claim 12 including a discharge aperture located at an end of the linear portion, the discharge aperture including louvers having an angle of 10 to 15° from the vertical.
Parent Case Info

This application is a division of Ser. No. 09/083,607 filed May 22, 1998.

US Referenced Citations (10)
Number Name Date Kind
3096931 Eck Jul 1963
3504617 Merklin et al. Apr 1970
4014625 Yamamoto Mar 1977
4264273 Grzina Apr 1981
4735551 Schilling Apr 1988
5141397 Sullivan Aug 1992
5156524 Forni Oct 1992
5279515 Moore et al. Jan 1994
5293758 Ames et al. Mar 1994
5570996 Smiley, III Nov 1996
Non-Patent Literature Citations (3)
Entry
“Self-Contained Unit Ventilator Heat Pump and Air Conditioning Models”, UV-DS-2, Jul. 1997, First Printing.
Air Cooled Self-Contained Unit Ventilator Heat Pump and Air Conditioner Models THPB, TACB, TSCB-IOM-1, Jun. 1997.
“Self-Contained Unit Ventilators”, MP-S-643.3, May 1997.